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Mr. Arkadin
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Mr. Arkadin (1955) More at IMDbPro »

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Mr. Arkadin (1955) -- A shady financier pays a man to research his past, in order to erase it with murder.

Overview

User Rating:
7.4/10   2,376 votes
MOVIEmeter: ?
Down 5% in popularity this week. See why on IMDbPro.
Director:
Writers:
Orson Welles (story)
Orson Welles (screenplay)
Contact:
View company contact information for Mr. Arkadin on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
2 October 1962 (USA) more
Tagline:
Discovering the past can be murder... more
Plot:
An American adventurer investigates the past of mysterious tycoon Arkadin...placing himself in grave danger. full summary | full synopsis
Plot Keywords:
User Reviews:
Welles struggling against the odds more (49 total)

Cast

  (in credits order) (verified as complete)

Orson Welles ... Gregory Arkadin
Michael Redgrave ... Burgomil Trebitsch
Patricia Medina ... Mily
Akim Tamiroff ... Jakob Zouk
Mischa Auer ... The Professor
Paola Mori ... Raina Arkadin
Katina Paxinou ... Sophie
Grégoire Aslan ... Bracco
Peter van Eyck ... Thaddeus
Suzanne Flon ... Baroness Nagel
Robert Arden ... Guy Van Stratten
Jack Watling ... Marquis of Rutleigh
Frédéric O'Brady ... Oscar (as O'Brady)
Tamara Shayne ... Woman in Apartment (as Tamara Shane)
Terence Longdon ... Secretary (as Terence Langdon)
Annabel ... Parisian woman with bread
Gert Fröbe ... Policeman (as Gert Frobe)
Eduard Linkers ... Man (as Eduard Linker)
Manuel Requena ... General Martinez
rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Emilio Fornet ... Party Guest (uncredited)
Manolita García ... (uncredited)
José González Talavera ... (uncredited)
Mateo Guitart ... (uncredited)
Gordon Heath ... Pianist (uncredited)
Gary Land ... (uncredited)
Vicente Martín ... (uncredited)
Sergio Mendizábal ... (uncredited)
Anne-Marie Mersen ... Uncredited (uncredited)
Antonio Molino Rojo ... (uncredited)
Sergio Orta ... (uncredited)
Carmen Rambla ... (uncredited)
Gustavo Re ... Italian police in Naples port (uncredited)
Robert Rietty ... Airport Control Tower Operator (uncredited)
Emilio G. Ruiz ... (uncredited)
Jacinto San Emeterio ... (uncredited)
Pedro Vidal ... (uncredited)
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Directed by
Orson Welles 
 
Writing credits
Orson Welles (story)

Orson Welles (screenplay)

Produced by
Louis Dolivet .... producer
Orson Welles .... producer
 
Original Music by
Paul Misraki 
 
Cinematography by
Jean Bourgoin 
 
Film Editing by
Renzo Lucidi 
William Morton (uncredited)
Orson Welles (uncredited)
 
Art Direction by
Orson Welles (uncredited)
 
Set Decoration by
Gil Parrondo (uncredited)
Luis Pérez Espinosa (uncredited)
 
Costume Design by
Orson Welles (uncredited)
 
Makeup Department
Roy Ashton .... makeup artist (uncredited)
Arcadio Ochoa .... makeup artist (uncredited)
Francisco Puyol .... makeup artist (uncredited)
 
Production Management
Michel Boisrond .... production manager (uncredited)
Juan N. Solórzano .... production manager: Spain (uncredited)
 
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
Isidoro M. Ferry .... assistant director (as Ferri)
José María Ochoa .... assistant director (as Jose Mario Ochoa)
José Luis de la Serna .... assistant director (as De La Serna)
 
Art Department
Francisco Prósper .... construction coordinator (uncredited)
Enrique de la Riva .... property master (uncredited)
 
Sound Department
Jacques Carrère .... sound re-recordist (as Jacques Carrere)
Jacques Lebreton .... sound
Jaime Torrens .... sound engineer: Spain (uncredited)
 
Camera and Electrical Department
Paul Rodier .... camera operator
Louis Stein .... camera operator
Félix Mirón .... additional cinematographer (uncredited)
Julio Ortas .... still photographer (uncredited)
Rafael Pacheco .... still photographer (uncredited)
Raúl Pérez Cubero .... additional camera operator (uncredited)
 
Editorial Department
Colette Cueille .... assistant editor
Lolita López .... assistant editor (uncredited)
 
Music Department
Antoñita Moreno .... saeta singer (uncredited)
 
Other crew
Johanna Horward .... script clerk
Jacques Laird .... researcher (as Jacqueline Laird)
Julio de Fleischner .... supervising director (uncredited)
Alfredo Ruescas .... production assistant (uncredited)
Tadeo Villalba .... production assistant (uncredited)
Billie Whitelaw .... dubbed voice: Paola Mori (uncredited)
 
Crew verified as complete


Production CompaniesDistributorsSpecial EffectsOther Companies
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Additional Details

Also Known As:
Confidential Report (UK)
Dossier secret (France)
Mister Arkadin (Spain)
Monsieur Arkadin - Dossier secret (France)
more
Runtime:
93 min | France:95 min (Cannes Film Festival) | USA:98 min (TCM print) | USA:105 min (2006 Restored Version)
Language:
Aspect Ratio:
1.37 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Mono (RCA Ultraviolet High Fidelity Sound System)
Certification:
Australia:PG | Finland:K-16 | UK:A (original rating) | UK:PG (re-rating) | Sweden:15
Filming Locations:
Company:

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
All of Paola Mori's dialogue was dubbed by Billie Whitelaw. more
Goofs:
Continuity: Orson Welles' prosthetic nose disappears when Arkadin meets with Jakob Zouk. more
Quotes:
Gregory Arkadin: Baroness, a fool is a man who pays twice for the same thing. more
Movie Connections:
Featured in La société du spectacle (1973) more
Soundtrack:
Saeta more

FAQ

This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.
21 out of 30 people found the following review useful.
Welles struggling against the odds, 6 September 2005
Author: tostinati from United States

Did I ever mention that I watched Mr. Arkadin every day for three months once? And that I recently bought a version of it different from the one I bought years ago (supposedly the UK print), and enjoyed it like I was seeing it for the first time?

Welles is a childhood hero. There's nothing rational about my feelings about Welles. If there are Welles fan boys, I admit to being one. But I have entertained the notion that I like Mr. Arkadin (also called Confidential Report, sometimes) as much as I do because it so completely betrays Welles as a titanic artist having to deal with the small frustrations and vicissitudes of Everyman. The bones of the thing, the behind the scene life of the film, the fact that the whole thing at one point passed through the man's hands shows through more than on any film he ever made. You actually see the customs stamps at the end of reels! His stratagems are more obvious, his resources more threadbare here than even Othello, his most legendary prolonged/disjointed/truncated shoot. Parts of it look shot on Super8; as good as some of it looks, at other times, the lighting doesn't feel professional (I am thinking of the nightclub and penitent procession scenes). In the end, I think Arkadin is the one completed and released Welles film that humanizes the man, without exactly bringing him low.

Clinching my interest in the film is Welles' comment, reiterated for different interviewers through the years, that Arkadin contained the best story he ever thought up to film. (He made a radio script of it first, and when he refined it for film, he saw fit to keep perhaps 95% intact from the radio play.) I may not agree with Welles' own appraisal of Arkadin as a story, but again, his comments betray perhaps more than intended: Welles' deep, and possibly irrational, feeling of attachment to this film. He said he considered it the most 'destroyed' film (destroyed by outside interference) he ever made. --Worse even than The Ambersons! I really think he never had "closure" with the experience of making Arkadin, and it continued to haunt him the rest of his days.

I invite you to take a look at it (it is available in many cheap public domain DVD versions) and see if you, too, fall under its spell. If it leaves you totally cold, or you can't take it seriously, I understand. But remember, better and worse DVD versions exist. Supposedly, the Criterion Collection will release it sometime in the next couple of years. That may be the version to make your definitive move with.

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Bruce Campell justinrdamm
Dubbing of ... richard-mason
A Diaster Only a Genius Could Make LynchNut77
Resemblance to Neil Jordan`s 'The Crying Game' zuch-4
Some questions on the plot (spoilers). pinknick
questions about the plot Capeman
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